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Integrating Treatment for Mental and Physical Disorders and Substance Misuse in Indigenous Primary Care Settings

Objective: Australian Indigenous peoples in remote and rural settings continue to have limited access to treatment for mental illness. Comorbid disorders complicate presentations in primary care where Indigenous youths and perinatal women are at particular risk. Despite this high comorbidity there a...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Australasian psychiatry : bulletin of the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists 2011-07, Vol.19 (1_suppl), p.S17-S19
Main Authors: Nagel, Tricia, Kavanagh, David, Barclay, Lesley, Trauer, Thomas, Chenhall, Richard, Frendin, Jennifer, Griffin, Carolyn
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Objective: Australian Indigenous peoples in remote and rural settings continue to have limited access to treatment for mental illness. Comorbid disorders complicate presentations in primary care where Indigenous youths and perinatal women are at particular risk. Despite this high comorbidity there are few examples of successful models of integrated treatment. This paper outlines these challenges and provides recommendations for practice that derive from recent developments in the Northern Territory.Conclusions: There is a strong need to develop evidence for the effectiveness of integrated and culturally informed individual and service level interventions. We describe the Best practice in Early intervention Assessment and Treatment of depression and substance misuse study which seeks to address this need.
ISSN:1039-8562
1440-1665
DOI:10.3109/10398562.2011.583070